Clinical benefit and cost effectiveness of adding life-time low-dose colchicine as secondary prevention following coronary artery bypass grafting surgery

Sai Rahul Ponnana, Gauranga Mahalwar, Joris Holtrop, Steven H.J. Hageman, Tong Zhang, Santosh Kumar Sirasapalli, Skanda Moorthy, Zhuo Chen, Jean Eudes Dazard, Sadeer Al-Kindi, Yakov Elgudin, Naveed Sattar, Sanjay Rajagopalan, Salil V. Deo*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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Abstract

Background: Low-dose Colchicine therapy has demonstrated clinical benefit as secondary preventive therapy in patients with chronic coronary artery disease. While prior studies have reported its cost-effectiveness in this patient group, this has not yet been studied in post-coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) patients. Therefore, we evaluated the 5-year potential clinical benefit and lifetime cost-effectiveness of adding low-dose Colchicine to routine secondary preventive therapy among U.S. Veterans post-CABG. Methods: A discrete time-homogeneous, annual cycle, state-transition Markov Chain model was developed using MACE (myocardial infarction, stroke, coronary reintervention, and all-cause mortality) information from 27,443 U.S. Veterans who underwent CABG. Cost and utility estimates were sourced from peer-reviewed literature. Current secondary preventive therapy was compared with secondary preventive therapy + Colchicine over a 35-year period. Clinical benefit was extrapolated from a nationwide perspective. Cost-effectiveness was modeled by calculating incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) across a wide range of willingness-to-pay (WTP) thresholds. Deterministic, probabilistic, and alternative real-world scenarios were modeled to evaluate real-world use. Results: In 150,000 isolated CABG patients who received surgery in 2019 across the U.S., Colchicine therapy could potentially reduce 8266 myocardial infarctions, 16,674 strokes, and 9472 coronary reinterventions over 5 years. Lifetime Colchicine therapy yielded a QALY gain of 0.74 and an ICER of $26,684 per QALY. Monte Carlo simulation supported these findings (median ICER: $19,598; IQR: $17,995–$20,921). Colchicine remained cost-effective at WTP thresholds >$20,000 per QALY, even with 5-year or mixed adherence. Conclusion: Adjunct life-long Colchicine therapy may reduce cardiovascular events at an acceptable additional cost post-CABG.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100580
Journal American Heart Journal Plus: Cardiology Research and Practice
Volume57
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2025

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